Hartley's Additional Continental Regiment

The delegates gave Washington sweeping authority to appoint officers and recruit an additional 16 battalions of infantry, three regiments of artillery, an engineer corps, and light cavalry formations.[7] On 11 September 1777, Hartley's Regiment fought at the Battle of Brandywine as part of a 2,000-man division led by Brigadier General Anthony Wayne.The right-most unit was deployed on the Great Road with Colonel Thomas Proctor's artillery lunette about 200 yards (183 m) in front.The Anglo-Hessian division led by Lieutenant General Wilhelm von Knyphausen attacked across Brandywine Creek at Chadds Ford.Shortly after mounting a second horse, he was fatally struck by a projectile and fell into the arms of Lieutenant Colonel Adam Hubley of the 10th Pennsylvania.When the British and Hessians threatened to turn both of Wayne's flanks, he withdrew his division 600 yards (549 m) to a hill while successfully bringing off the brigade artillery.After the light troops held up Conway's advance near Mount Pleasant, Sullivan committed the 1st and 2nd Maryland Brigades to the right of the Germantown Road and Wayne's division to the left.After firing a few volleys at the house with no effect, Wayne's men left it behind and continued their southward advance into the morning's fog.When the American rear echelon units began bombarding the Chew House with cannons, Wayne and his men became anxious and turned back.Confused in the fog and taking fire from several directions, Wayne's men took to their heels and did not rally until they were 3 miles (4.8 km) from the battlefield.In September 1778, elements of the regiment participated in a counter-raid in which they destroyed a few indigenous villages, recovered plunder taken in the Wyoming Valley, and skirmished with Seneca warriors.[22] In this action, Butler's Rangers, Brant's Volunteers, and several hundred Seneca and Cayuga warriors attempted to ambush Sullivan's 3,200-man column.The Iroquois people were forced to beg for food from the British that winter, but their ferocious attacks on frontier settlements continued.
Portrait of a determined-looking man with white hair. He looks to the viewer's left with his head in profile.
Richard Henry Lee urged the appointment of Thomas Hartley as colonel.
Painting shows ragged-looking soldiers advancing into battle under an equally tattered US flag.
Howard Pyle 's "Nationmakers" depicts American soldiers marching into action at the Battle of Brandywine.
Print shows a dark-haired man in a late 18th century military uniform with a dark coat and light-colored lapels.
John Sullivan led an expedition against the Iroquis in the summer of 1779.
Continental CongressInfantryContinental LineNorthern New JerseyBattle of BrandywineBattle of PaoliBattle of GermantownThomas HartleyPhiladelphia campaignBound BrookShort HillsStaten IslandCooch's BridgeBrandywineCloudsGermantownRed BankFort MifflinGloucesterWhite MarshMatson's FordValley ForgeConway CabalQuinton's BridgeClow RebellionCrooked BilletBarren HillCarlisle Peace CommissionMonmouthAmerican Revolutionary WarContinental ArmyList of Continental unitsConnecticutDelawareGeorgiaMarylandMassachusettsNew HampshireNew JerseyNew YorkNorth CarolinaPennsylvaniaRhode IslandSouth CarolinaVermontVirginiaExtra and Additional regimentsArmand's LegionPulaski's LegionLee's LegionOttendorf's CorpsCommander-in-Chief's GuardState militiaList of state unitsAdditional Continental RegimentPatton's Additional Continental RegimentMalcolm's Additional Continental RegimentSullivan Expedition3rd Pennsylvania RegimentGeorge WashingtonRichard Henry Leecolonellieutenant colonel6th Pennsylvania Battalion1st Pennsylvania RegimentBrigadier GeneralAnthony WayneMajor GeneralBenjamin Lincoln7th Pennsylvania Regiments2nd Pennsylvania RegimentsThomas ProctorLieutenant GeneralWilhelm von KnyphausenBrandywine CreekChadds FordHoward PyleJohn SullivanThomas ConwayMount AirySir William Howe5th Foot55th Foot40th FootChew HouseAdam Stephenfriendly firePennsylvania LineThruston's Additional Continental RegimentIroquoisAmerican LoyalistWyoming ValleyBattle of WyomingSeneca warriorsUnadilla11th Pennsylvania Regiment10th Pennsylvania RegimentEdward HandBattle of NewtownButler's RangersBrant's VolunteersEnoch PoorJames Clinton1st New JerseyJoseph BrantHand'sBoatner, Mark M. IIIWright, Robert K. Jr.United States Army Center of Military HistoryWayback Machine2nd Pennsylvania Regiment4th Pennsylvania Regiment5th Pennsylvania Regiment6th Pennsylvania Regiment7th Pennsylvania Regiment8th Pennsylvania Regiment9th Pennsylvania Regiment12th Pennsylvania Regiment13th Pennsylvania Regiment1st Continental RegimentGerman Battalion4th Continental Artillery RegimentFirst Troop Philadelphia City CavalryDepartments 1777–1784Extra Continental regiments and Additional Continental regiments1st Canadian2nd CanadianMilitia units that participated alongsideArmand'sPulaski'sKnox'sNewburgh ConspiracyPennsylvania Line MutinyPompton MutinyPennsylvania Mutiny of 1783Regulations for the Order and Discipline of the Troops of the United StatesBoard of WarGeorge Washington in the American Revolution